Aphasia summer program focuses on communication and connection
With the continued goal of helping people with aphasia improve their ability to communicate while forming important social connections, the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders hosted its third annual summer aphasia program in June and July.
An estimated 2 million people in the United States live with aphasia, a communication disorder that affects a person鈥檚 ability to understand language and communicate. About one in three people who have a stroke experience aphasia, said program organizer Assistant Professor Cathy Torrington Eaton, PhD, CCC-SLP.
Divided into three, two-week sessions, the program included individual and group therapeutic activities for 27 participants. Two of the sessions were created for people with sudden onset aphasia, such as after a stroke or traumatic brain injury, and one session was designed for people with a progressive form of aphasia in which language declines over time, Eaton said.
People with aphasia can feel isolated. That was the case for Terri Perry, a former teacher who developed aphasia following a stroke eight years ago. The program has given her tools to improve her ability to speak and the opportunity to socialize, she said.
鈥淚t makes me feel good,鈥 Perry said of the program, showing the journal she writes in daily and that she shared with the group during a presentation she gave on the last day of the session.
The program also gave 23 graduate speech-language pathology students the opportunity to evaluate participants, create therapy plans and work with individuals and groups during the 32 hours of each session, under the supervision of speech-language pathologists who specialize in aphasia, Eaton said.
Eaton and her fellow researchers are collecting data from the program for various research projects. The long-term goal is to create an aphasia center in San Antonio.
鈥淲e are looking for a place to form this community where individuals would be able to go on weekdays to socialize and have structured programming,鈥 Eaton said.
The Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders also offers a monthly community support group, the San Antonio Network for Aphasia (SANA), which meets most first Thursdays of the month from 6鈥7:30 p.m. on the 福利一区在线 campus.
To learn more about SANA and aphasia, watch this from KENS 5.
To help support the summer program and SANA, visit and select 鈥淪peech-Language pathology鈥 from the designation drop-down menu. Gifts should be specified in the comments section as going to 鈥淪an Antonio Network for Aphasia.鈥